Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 31, 1921, Page 4

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S8 amein; M8V N 2k s.wvit s e h Tastaas Sal, vt oo 80 O . Sl Ty Ak Netwdeh, Wedneotny, Aug. 31, 1031, WEEK ENDING AUG. 27th, 1921 UN UNEMPLOYMENT OONVERENCE Conditions are such as to cause much interest to be taken in the plan that has been proposed for the calling ©of a national conference for the eration of the question of unemp in the howes that arrangements made whereby-there will be an improve- ment in industrial conditions. Wo are approaching a season of the year when wnempioymen: conditions tound to be mueh more serfously felt and therefore mot a bit too early that ® asid- it should be taken with a view to relie ing the eftwatior ag mi possib by fasieg the facta and giving so consideration to the best means meeting themn The faet that many constructive sug- gestions have already been advamce indichtes that the conference will lack for as to how steps can taken to relieve (he sitmation and & an opportuni to r the den: indieations t na been Droving . & and are signs of in some Whether nally represent earners who dent nerea the figures cannot get w Bettle matters w Ir before o b thers s no imtention The aim . econference to wh ety Beedad that eooperation may result me. | A GROWING BUSINESS i How xtensivel s indulged fn and to the effect just passed thers boroughs Mani wiome machines plaged at fust swner o reduee by half te sinc the machines Nevertheless New York recor * he showing a gain correspond year, the r the previous | e previous e metropo ery the business | A concerted and de- s mads to check turn the mumber of thefts Hirection the greater will it reflected mpon t and n the other thers be cred- the authorities IN ASIA MINOE. 1 thers has been a correct reprs- Bemtation of the situation that exists fa Asia Mmor and the Turks have wtruck eich & blow at the Greeks as %o ssver the right wing of its army Rhere are regsons why the euccessful effart of the Turks should be regarded “ith concern Graecs has made extraordinary ef- forts in conmection with this latest of- Fensive against the Turkish nation- s It has insisted upon ecarrying thrpagh the struggle in spite of the wellprts that were made to reach a com- Promise peace, and mp to the present it hag been making fairly good progress 3n the mew camvaism. But as it has lengthened its line of communieation aad pashed over new ground it has left Stslf open to a well directed blow by the snemy even though it has been in- £lined to put the Turks down ag badly beganized and poorly euipped The petback which the Greeks have Peceived, if in fact it proves to be no Wprws than a setback, Is open to merl- uy censequences unless the Greeks are whle te hustle up suficient reinforce- meats to turn back the offemsive which Pheir temperoray muccess has encour- nawd. Greece has gained much ground X A L seru | that the recess will be passed. dire eonsequences: ‘his iy the second time that the arks have been able to administer @ telling blow te the Graeke Bt oritival points. Onp the vreviona sffensive when the Grecks believed they were nbont to adminlater & crashing defest the nas tonalista landed upon thept #o heavily 88 to put an end t6 the eamvaign and glve Greeoe cause for Worry. Himilar- Iy have the Turke drawn the Greeks o In the sogond offensive until they havd seemingly gotten them whera they de sireg and fell upon them with telling oifget. Grocce thus has had twe pows erfal lessons in - handling the problem in iAsia Minor, where one It would soem: should have been sufficlent. BAIDING THE FARMS. When reports come from about the state that the farmers are suffering considerable losses from the theft of their crops and attribute such to those Who visit the countryside in automo- Dbiles and.get away with the loot long beforo the owners know anything about It, there is again disclosed = situation which cannot fail to arouse much sym- pathy for the farmers. Such products are the resuit of hard labor and they should got the bepefit. The idea that whatever can be picked up or_obtained in the country ought not to be paid for even when such things are dug from grounc or picked from vines or of course against the law but comes in catobing the at their work. thefts are of course nothike new They have been going on for years and surrounding the larger cities there are those who make a practice of uring the country round about for 1 kinds of garden truck which can be to be peddied from houge to the next day. Faids of this kind have been going on for years, the the seh len house us of oparations being Increased and the ease of getting to and away from the fields of operations greatly by the automobile. Efforts were the last session of the gen- Iy to have legisation adopt- woud deal with this situation hoves of decressing the losses farmers suffer, but hope rests reorganized state police de- | nd such efforts as the farm- nt forth themselves to remed loss, made doesn't far ing ana it conditions continic | the farmers will be n a determination to see that rights are properly respected WAR PROPERTIES. ry Ford made his pro- government about taking iscle shoals nitrate and t was of course felt that oftering anywhere nea property SELLING was not that basia what the plant Was worth o t can be sald that those who | the wooden ships from the! | % | fraction of what they | overnment, In the latter in- e the fecling prevails that it Is the interest of the government that nould be disposed of for thi v deteriorating and be sold for less or de- d a heavy maint o same condition Muscle shoals pla rts to determine s offer was made public it digciosed -that others have shown ntercst therein and oniy recently an| been made upon the Ford| Pinchot who declares would get inadequate | provision ought to be o such a del goes throug exists government will rega! of the property at the con- ! of the contract. Likewise he b s it should hown what real 1dvaniage would acorue to the farmers | country from the fertilizer plant. ) propo e makes it is not| supposed that Yr. Ford is cngaged | flanthropic undertaking. He e s sces a chance to make money as others do who deSire to Is from the shipping however, there are others | are willing to bid higher and can| back up their offer with an adequate bond they certainly should get it. Con-! g the way the plant was buiit is no reason to expect that the rument will make 3 subsantiah upon more than it will | the wooden ehips or other War pro- | There are reasons to believe | the Ford offer was baing carefully | zed before Mr. Pinchot offered enggestions. th b upon Aucts that his EDITORIAL NOTES, The man on the corner says: It be- gins to look like a hard wmonth for the isn’t trouble enough el!E-i India can be depended upen to| keep the pot boiling. How congress will do It wight be hard to tell but it is downright certain ermany signs the treaty mueh the same as Panama meets the demapds— beeause there’s nothing else to do and accomplish anything. ven though medicigal beer femtt ob- nable the surprise is that the erowd fsn't listening to the talk of those whe are offering something just as good. It yet remains to be explained- how thogse Chicago swindlers ever allowed now bands to get hold of the shipping board before they had mopped up the remains, Knowing how they got into thelr present situation perhaps Mr. MpAdoo would be rendering & greater mervice by suggesting a better way out of it than 15 being followed. Where contraets are being awarded for thousands of dollars leis than they could have been last Februpry action has been taken that should gmean in- creased business In some lines. That is prefty good advice given by the Interstate commerce commission to railrosds seeking to spend $60.000,000 on & mew terminal when they are told to wait. There are greater needa just now. New York has procesded rapidly m the eonvietion and senteneing of one Fho had & part in the | course leads him to vi | for this states | the white settlers and their red foes, i ony” SOME INSIDE INFORMATION “I think that Armenia is serious;his scrambled eggs, which. puts the about that young Arthur Brmkpnner‘fi‘:‘sgng"fl“"‘e:ln o el e who has Leen coming here so often | TN SIC FEL 56, 009 Tho SAWE, Hote this winter” declared Armenia’s father ed; that he camnet llve without her, contidently to her mother. “DId you|s0 the wrecl “kitchen she usually know that ghe took him out in the kit- | leaves In her triumph serves a good chen last evening and made candy?"|end, after all. ‘ “Evon gn utter stranger could have| “For say what you will, most girls told that,” Armenia’s mother informed |get married sooner.or later and it be- him. “Whea I went to get breakfast|hooves them to be up and doing bofore this morning I had to exeuvate the|sll the bargains ary picked over.' stove, which, was nearly burled beneath | ~“But I heard her saying that sho just bolledover candy, and there were nine | loves to coais things,” said Armenia's pots, pans and bowla left in the sink other parent, “What has she been in completely enameled with handened | the habit of cooking for us?’ sugar, which is {mpossible to get off| “well, if she comes down late the oxcept with dynamite, P'm saying no- | child has to make her own toast,” con- thing about the floor linoleum, which | ceded her mother, “You known that has been transformed into a trap pol-|making toast is very'dlfficult work ka-dotted with exceedingly sticky and hard on the complexion, To my drops of the stuff, In fact, I cannot|utter surprise I heard her assure him imagine how there could have been over the telephone recently, when he eny candy left to be eaten!" inquired what she was doing then, , “Oh, that wouldn't matter,” sald Ar-|that she had been scrubbing the kit menia’s father. “What I am getting at chen floor, Hurrying out to view #fis is that Armenla seems to be developing | miracle, I deduced that what Armenia & domestic side to her nature.” had really done was to take the patent “Well, I stan’t interfere with Arthur mop and wipe up a few drops of water Brickpatter's fond imaginings on fhe|which had spatteréd when she filled subject,” his wife promised him, “I 2 water glass at the faucet. suppose, being a man, he will think| “But Armenia is a sweet girl and precisely as you do about it, but I|it's perfectly all right for Arthur belong to the Order of Amalgamated Brickpatters is up to the same tricks. Women and Armenia’s little ways are| He is giving &n imitation of & young simply transparent to me! man who never in all his life would “The siiliest, fluffiest, laziest little|do anything else than gaze adoringly blond that ever slept till 11 o'clock |and demand to be told every little regularly mornings and polished her|thing which had occurred in the life nails while mother is scrubbing the|of his beloved one since he saw her kitcben floor can work the trick. All{last at breakfast time. Armenia will she has to do is put on the best apron |learn to cook eventually, so he won't she can find in the kitchen collection— | be fooled, after all, but she'll have to she usually burns holes in it—and a|resign herself like all the rest of us to distractingly serious little frown and |a husband who wants to read the paper surround herself with a perfectly spick|or a detective story and growls if we and span kitchen. Sometimes she try to converse with him—" gives herself away because she h: ‘Aw,” said Armenia’s father. to hunt ten minutes to find the salt{not so bad as that, am I? Say, I've or the sugar and nearly always the|just been remembering how you used baking powder can remains a perman- | to hand me out doughnuts that were ently lost affair if she assays biscuits.|licking good and you mentioned that “But it is usually candy they make. In the place all young men can gorge on candy and no matter how poorly made it is it still remains sweet which is the main thing stirring the mixture o vou honestly and truly cook 'em your- self, Bengaline?” Seeing her| “You ge right on reading that book," the fire of | said Armenia’s mother hastily. “Pretty s of her mak- | soon you'll know too much for your ing the breakfast coffee and cookinglown good,—Chicago News. row portion of this state resembling a panhandle, that between the Ohio river and the Pennsylvania boundary. The people are known as the “Pan- handlers” ansas is known as the Jayhawker which appears to have 0D INCIDENTS IN HISTORY e THE NICKNAMES OF THE STATES| of the forty-eight states in from time to time been either by some circum AMERICAN stance of its ded prior to 1858, Later it rnia in 1849, but no in some accident, which d to marauders on both have dling to them and by il war and finally which title they are often referred to| people of Kansas. in speaking of them, a the same 18| the Sunflower true of the inhal f these stat from the number of those plants some of s have more ol that are grown ther nic ’ bee! while the mor mes of ess trivially | lan { less signific others have given. Pennsylvania b known as the Ke; other New Eng- in the above, ate, from seal adopted in 1820, the Granite State, come down to by one state for t ason at the time of the orgamiza-|irom the granite tion of the thirteen states Pennsyl- | quarried the n vania was looked upon as the centrsl| Mountain State, from the chain of of the thirteen states were arransed |mountains which cross it, and Rhode e of the U d when the nome; Rhody, from its diminu- in the form rch Pen; 2 would o he place of the Key-| nicknames of stone, The peopie of the state have e State; had attached to them the name of nd El Dora Pennanites and leatr E of the w York Ilinois, Prai- pire state on accou Hawkeye; n, Wol- ippi. evada, Sil- mos pul the Union, called Knicke; Ohio is called the Buckeye , Turpentine; Ne- cause of the horse sh; Oregon, Webfoot; which grow a, Palmetto; Washing- and which, for known bear as een, and Wisconsin, Bad- 3 peculiar n suckeyes.” Flour Riots of 1837) o e = Colony of | and under the|| READ YOUR CHARACTER |! second charter Province of the!| By Digby Philli H Massachu; Hence, the nick- || Ty 3 1 nameé Bay Dragiha i Copyrighted 1621 1: Bay state. The peopl called Bean | — — — | Baters, from their partiality for Bos- Sense of Form ton besus 1 frowh bread. A sense of form is something that Connecticut has named the|will vour . becoming a great Land of Stea given in al- haven't got it. That’ lusion to the moral character of he inhabitants, and Nutmeg State, which is far less complimentary, since it wa. bestowed on account of the people’s supposed shrewdness, who were jo- £ being clever enough backward, presses the meaning. The sense of form is what ena you to remember, and to reproduce u have the manual dexterity, put- nes, shapes, faces, figures, curves, de- | but exactly ex- es | to palm off wooden nutmegs for thelsigns and the like. Its sometioes | miee o o Bine|TeferTed ta as a “true eve but ivs Hocloware also has two names—Blue| not o matter of the eve at all, Dt of iamond. irs : ; 1e | certain brain functions back' of the probably came through the fact that| 2 5 b eye. during the Revolutionary war the| 3 : . e & Maybe you think there’s no way to| Delaware soldiers were known as “The | o1 . 2 . 10wy, 8 2| tell whether @ man or we 4 Biue Hen's Chickens,” from the device A0 0F WemaiLhon o g00d sense of form without trying them on their flag. The latter name is given | sur. But there small size and great i i i | Look your straight in the The reason for Colorado being called | f2Ce: Are his ell apart? Is the Centennial state is that it was ad- | there 2 good development of the raof mitted into the Union as a state on|of NiS nose between his eve July 1, 1876. The people of the state|Das a good sense of form. have been nicknamed “Rovers”| But he may be no artist. Sense of though their unsettled tendencie form does not make an artist, though Kentucky is known as the Blue Grass|it i indispensable to one, unless he state from the blue grase ihat growe|COncerns himself only witl color har there in great abundance, and also as|MOnies. the Dark and Bloody Ground, the lat-| It is also an aid to the draftsman, ter an epitome of the conflicts between | the carpenter, the geologist, the brick- layer, the builder, the engineer; in fact to the follower of a host of trades and professions, not forgetting that it is our sense of form that enables us to remember the faces and general ap- pearance of those we meet, It is thepe- fore of value to the salesman and the “social butterfly”, not to mention the young lady who has so many, suitors she doesn’t know what to do. Tomorrow—Active Eyes | ? If so, he that section being the battleground between the Southern and Northern| Indians, The people of the state have been nicknamed the “Cornerackers,” perhaps because the poor whites sub-| sist mostly on corn, Virginia has several nicknames, most prominent of which are the Old Dominien and Mother of Presidents, In early documents we read of “the Col- of Virginia, while later about 1674, there are allusions to the “Col- ony and Dominion” of Virginia, about ] Btori 1682 to the “Dominion of Virginia”, Hence in time came the nickname to Virginia’s loyalty to the Stuarts during the civil war. The title Mother of Presidents came from the fact that seven of our presidents were born in Virginia. ‘West Virginia is known as the Pan- handle state, because of the lopg nar- That Recall Others I . His Ambition A messenger boy is always reading lurid novels. The manager said to him the other day: “Charles, what's your ambition in life? The boy put down his Indian story gravely and said 'To have people trembie Lk death of & small hoy. Such edminis- tration of justice has much to do with — PISTRIBUYO OTTO E & BROS,, INC. ESTABLI Jos. Connor & Sons Distributor like leavos at th name.” Gleaned from Foreign Ex- changes. M. {mans £500,000 census retumns printe: and apout a week. issued from t expected that pleted in two w in Further reports would be Straphadging To in omnibuses and tramear is to come to an end on September 30. After that date b; sioner of maust be provided the curb, Magna © heen written abou the recent discussion of its birthplace, have récalled the remains a firmed by vears after it was sea at Runnymede. at various times Z e - - f Gl police, arts ldw of the turies it had first place in the book, in the form in wi the pariiam all over the world people use this goo0dy for its DOUBLEMINT NCHEWING GUb) pE’:‘_‘:)_l;;’:.lfl/\/’ SHED 1850 e mere mention of my nthe touse of com- st of the cen-| cotland and Wales wae | liminary 1. of the in nds of”the uld be published to time, and it was | work would be com- Cease—Straphanging | at any rate o 0 'R © - =3 Q! i T - | o ) — 2 £ — i ¥ a fiat off the Commis- very Hus passenger | with a seat or left on | ber of Acts passed by pariianment and |a quick in 1874 a Dbill repealing many Obtfllelolvn statutes was passed. This scarcely found |t day the | MAY EXTEND QUABANTINE % | ON SHIPMENT OF COEXN Repenled—Much Bas |mention in the press at the time, though ' ] Boston; Aug. 30—Quarantine regula it Magna Charta during | among the laws thus repealed was Mag- tax- |tions urohibiting the shipment of corx 88 to the futurelg, Charts. | asked by Lord |to other communities, now in effest in but one seems to Half a miilion | 140 cities and towns in i3 fact that it no longer be granted. Mstern-|soon be made state wide land. For cen-| Lt e difterence between 1919° and 1 is & worthy object |to hait the spread of the vish expend: L of health we are reminded cnce again of I res, but it must borer, R. o aas ©- | In the ear)d post grmistice period, ex- |restricted. And sa in division of plant pest c 3 by Kine john | Rilarated by the advent of veace, men e many cates |partment of gariculurs snnousced ta isions were]PeBan to Drepare far reaching sc®-mes of hardshiy e g e extended 5 provisions wer : z o ihe may 6o L mumg |0f soclal Teconstrustion, - and expected | the Temoval of v immediak to other vegetables sad within their pow: RING'S MARKET THAYER- BLDG.= FRANKLIN: SQUARE Franklin Square Thayer Bldg. LEAN SMOKED SHOULDERS Pound 17¢ BES Enjoy Your Lunch On a Hot Day! Of course you can—if you eat sen- sibly. Let us suggest you try a bowl of Wheatsworth Crackers and Milk instead ~ of a heavy meat meal. LEAN CORNED. BEEF Pound 8¢’ i BEEF CHUCK ROAS FOR POTTING Pound 16¢ Pound 121/5¢ FRESH CUT HAMBURG, bb..... 16c ~ CURLY Large Yellow Alberta LETTUCE PEACHES Head 5¢ Quart 15¢ FRESH SELECTED MILD CREAM 'EGGS CHEESE 25¢ You will relish this eooling, delightful luncheon to the last flavory mouthful— dnd feel comfortable” all "afternoon, be- cause Wheatsworth supplies nourishment without taxing your digestion. Gives you all the muscle-making, bone- building elements of the whole grain, Short, Sirloin, Porterhouse, Round carecseren Restaurants and Fountains F. H. BENNETT BISCUIT CO,, N. Y.

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